22 point sim anomaly
#1
Posted 2009-September-20, 12:56
Finding no reason to explain this, are others finding this anomaly? Is 22 just a confluence of overrated Q/J for example? Is 22 "heavy" in quacks?
#2
Posted 2009-September-20, 13:40
1. Tricks won under what conditions?
2. What do you mean by 'succeeds 1/3 as 21 and 1/2 as 23'
#4
Posted 2009-September-20, 16:33
dake50, on Sep 20 2009, 08:56 PM, said:
...
No idea what this means.
If it means that a 22 hcp hand takes fewer tricks than a 21 hcp hand, then you have just proven that there is a bug in your program.
#5
Posted 2009-September-22, 09:51
#6
Posted 2009-September-22, 10:32
Let us take 4 posints as a simple example,
there are 4 ways to make this with aces,
there are 6 ways to make thsi with two queens
there is 1 way to make this with 4 jacks
there are 16 ways to make this with a K and a J.
There are 24 ways to make this with a Q and two jacks.
51 total
Average nuimbers:
0.08 aces
0.31 kings
0.71 queens
1.33 jacks
Thus the average here is skewed hugely in favour of soft values, let us conisder a neighbouring example
Let us take say 5 points
there are 16 ways to make this with an ace and a J
16 ways to make this with a K and Q
there are 24 ways to make this with a K and two jacks
there are 24 ways to make this with two Q's and a jack
there are 16 ways to make this with a Q and 3 jacks.
86 hands total
Average number
0.19
0.47
0.93
1.77
Thus adding a single point more than doubles the expected number of aces but has a smaller effect on kings. I beleive this to be a feature of combinatorics with a limited number of things - there will be 'magic numbers' that maximise the chance of aces per HCP. Put another way, if i used a more complex ways of measuring the value of aces, that mroe closely tied their value to their trick taking potential, say the zar perscription, then i might find that the cominatorics means that my value scores to not vary smoothly with my milton points.
here say my zar HCP points, 6,4,2,1 gives an average 4.47 and 6.65, which is a lto more than the 1.3 increase you might expect from changing from a 10 to a 13 point scale. Thus my value per Milton is more on the 5 point hand than on the 4 point hand. With numbers close to 20 one might expect the largest variation, as that should be where the cominatorics should maximise the aces per HCP (i guestimate).
EDIT: i hope niobody read this before I realised i had cacluated the permutations not the cominations
PS I do not have anything like the patience to work out the cominatorics for 21 22 and 23 HCP.
#7
Posted 2009-September-22, 10:37
I am not surprised that you find anomalies for hands with 22 HCP.
#8
Posted 2009-September-22, 12:27
hanp, on Sep 22 2009, 11:37 AM, said:
I am not surprised that you find anomalies for hands with 22 HCP.
it's also the number of players that start on the pitch of a football match.
#9
Posted 2009-September-22, 13:14
-P.J. Painter.
#10
Posted 2009-September-22, 14:20
hanp, on Sep 23 2009, 04:37 AM, said:
It is easily disproved.
Consider 2.
QED
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#12
Posted 2009-September-22, 14:30
Hang on that doesn't work.
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#13
Posted 2009-September-22, 14:34
George Carlin
#14
Posted 2009-September-22, 15:08
Jlall, on Sep 22 2009, 03:22 PM, said:
That makes you an anomaly.
#15
Posted 2009-September-22, 15:39
If it means something more subtle, say that 22 vs (21+23)/2 break an otherwise apparent convex (or concave?) trend, then it might be interesting.
#16
Posted 2009-September-22, 20:07
maggieb, on Sep 22 2009, 04:08 PM, said:
Jlall, on Sep 22 2009, 03:22 PM, said:
That makes you an anomaly.
When he reaches 23, then he can let us know. Until then, he's guessing.
-P.J. Painter.
#17
Posted 2009-September-23, 01:13
phil_20686, on Sep 22 2009, 08:32 AM, said:
PS I do not have anything like the patience to work out the cominatorics for 21 22 and 23 HCP.
I get that there are 4380 different combinations of HCP to get 22 and that we expect on average:
2.276 A
2.195 K
2.127 Q
2.059 J
Which, if anything, seems to favor A over the others. But when I look at 23 HCP I get out of the 4064 possibilities an average of:
2.413 A
2.292 K
2.189 Q
2.092 J
and we can see that the extra point is spread 0.138 A, 0.098 K, 0.062 Q, 0.032 J. This is not surprising that it takes a lot more tricks.
But we want to see 21 HCP take more tricks too. There are 4580 possible combinations of HCP to get 21 and we expect on average:
2.141 A
2.096 K
2.058 Q
2.031 J
and we can see that going from 21 to 22 adds the extra HCP through 0.134 A, 0.098 K, 0.069 Q, 0.029 J which is quite similar to the extra HCP addition we had going from 22 to 23.
So we can see that each point around here does increase the expected Aces more than it increases the expected J's, however, there is no reason to suspect that 22 is some anomaly in the trick taking distributions.
#18
Posted 2009-September-23, 11:49
My revised calculations give for 21,22,23 HCP:
21: 2.695 A 2.073 K 1.488 Q 1.023 J
22: 2.846 A 2.167 K 1.549 Q 1.014 J
23: 2.985 A 2.290 K 1.597 Q 0.998 J
So again the expected number of Jacks is actually going down slightly, and the number of AKQ are all going up. And A's are even more common than what I wrote before (which makes sense because they give the most points per card leaving the most spaces for 2-T fillers). But it doesn't look like 22 is special in any way.
#19
Posted 2009-September-23, 14:39
My rounded rules of thumb are:
ACES = 0.15 * HCP - 0.5
KINGS = 0.1 * HCP
QUEENS = 0.05 * HCP + 0.5
JACKS = 1
The correlation for these (when unrounded) is around the high 90s.
So each HCP extra on average produces about 0.15 extra ace, 0.1 extra king, 0.05 extra queen and no extra jacks. And this is fairly independent of the number of HCP.
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#20
Posted 2009-September-23, 14:47
ACES = 0.15080137869129 * HCP - 0.50274312636775
KINGS = 0.099957885163922 * HCP - 0.000661360065993
QUEENS = 0.046115866115133 * HCP + 0.54936553633723
JACKS = -0.000338630416366 * HCP + 1.01687231334264
I am not 100% sure over what range of HCP these regressions were calculated. I can check when I get home if anyone is interested but I am away from home for about 10 days.
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon

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